behemoth
[ bih-hee-muh th, bee-uh- ]
/ bɪˈhi məθ, ˈbi ə- /
noun
an animal, perhaps the hippopotamus, mentioned in Job 40:15–24.
any creature or thing of monstrous size or power: The army's new tank is a behemoth. The cartel is a behemoth that small business owners fear.
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What exactly is a behemoth? Well, the original behemoth was found in the ... duh, duh, duh ... Bible.
Origin of behemoth
1350–1400; < Hebrew
bəhēmōth, an augmentative plural of
bəhēmāh beast; replacing Middle English
bemoth
historical usage of behemoth
The original
behemoth is found in the Bible. Job 40:15-24 describes a land-dwelling beast having mythic proportions (a tail like a cedar tree) and supernatural characteristics (bones like bars of brass and iron). The Hebrew word that is used (
bəhēmōth ) is the augmentative plural form of the word for “beast” or “animal.” Normally,
bəhēmōth would translate as the plural noun “beasts,” but as it is used to describe a singular being, the interpretation is that of a mighty or monstrous animal.
Much folklore has arisen around behemoth. One story has it that behemoth, separated from its aquatic counterpart leviathan at the dawn of creation, will be reunited with it in an epic battle on Judgment Day in which each will slay the other. Following this biblical King Kong vs. Godzilla match, both animals will be served up as a feast for the remaining faithful.
Behemoth makes an appearance in such classics of literature as John Milton's Paradise Lost, Shelley's Prometheus Unbound, and James Joyce's Finnegans Wake. Today we use it to apply to anything large, powerful, and often unwieldy.
Much folklore has arisen around behemoth. One story has it that behemoth, separated from its aquatic counterpart leviathan at the dawn of creation, will be reunited with it in an epic battle on Judgment Day in which each will slay the other. Following this biblical King Kong vs. Godzilla match, both animals will be served up as a feast for the remaining faithful.
Behemoth makes an appearance in such classics of literature as John Milton's Paradise Lost, Shelley's Prometheus Unbound, and James Joyce's Finnegans Wake. Today we use it to apply to anything large, powerful, and often unwieldy.
popular references for behemoth
— Behemoth: Thomas Hobbes's 1681 book on the English Civil Wars, from the Scottish revolution in 1637 to the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660.
—Behemoth: A character in The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov. Behemoth is a walking, talking, gun-toting black cat, and a demon in disguise.
—Behemoth: A Polish rock band, playing what's known as blackened death metal, a mix of black metal and thrash metal music.
—The Behemoth: A video game development company, creators of the popular video games Alien Hominid (2004) and Castle Crashers (2008).
— Behemoth: The second book in Scott Westerfield’s steampunk young adult series, published in 2010.
Quotations related to behemoth
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"Whom the Hebrues call Bemoth that doth in latin playne expresse / A beast rude full of cursednesse."-John Lydgate Troy Book, II. xvii (1430)
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"Behemoth, biggest born of earth."-John Milton Paradise Lost (1667)
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"[T]he unwieldy behemoths of the old economy are falling over each other to reinvent their identities."-Oliver Burkeman If the name fits… Guardian (January 8, 2001)
Words nearby behemoth
behavioural science,
behavioural sink,
behaviourism,
behead,
beheld,
behemoth,
behenic,
behenic acid,
behest,
behind,
behind bars
Example sentences from the Web for behemoth
British Dictionary definitions for behemoth
behemoth
/ (bɪˈhiːmɒθ) /
noun
Old Testament
a gigantic beast, probably a hippopotamus, described in Job 40:15
a huge or monstrous person or thing
Word Origin for behemoth
C14: from Hebrew
běhēmōth, plural of
běhēmāh beast